2006年VOA标准英语-Environmental Clean-Up Efforts Needed Across Le(在线收听) |
By Robert Raffaele Various agencies are working to clean up the devastation inflicted on Lebanon's environment, and remove dangerous remnants of the month-long fighting. ----- While bulldozers clear rubble from bombed-out segments of Lebanon, various organizations are working to restore the nation's environment and decontaminate villages littered with live ammunition. Greenpeace says an estimated 10-to-15,000 tons of oil poured into the Mediterranean Sea, contaminating wide areas of the country's coastline. Video taken underwater shows some of the impact on fish and ecosystems.
Explosives experts from a U.K.-based company are deactivating and removing unexploded ordnance outside of Tyre. The United Nations sought the help of the Mines Advisory Group, or M.A.G. to remove undetonated mortars, rockets, and cluster munitions, comprised of so-called "bomblets."
M.A.G. spokesman Sean Sutton. "I've known two accidents where one child was picking grapes and the bomblet fell out of the vines. Another one with an older, 20-year-old picking apples, again there was a bomblet stuck in the tree and by shaking the tree, the bomblet fell out. Bang, he was dead." The United Nations' deputy humanitarian chief says some 8500 pieces of unexploded ordnance remain across southern Lebanon. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/8/34112.html |